Melancholy of power: perception of tyranny in European political culture of the 16th century
Gespeichert in:
Beteilige Person: | |
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Weitere beteiligte Personen: | |
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Veröffentlicht: |
Berlin ; Bern ; Bruxelles ; New York ; Oxford ; Warszawa ; Wien
Peter Lang
[2021]
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Schriftenreihe: | Geschichte – Erinnerung – Politik. Studies in History, Memory and Politics
volume 41 |
Schlagwörter: | |
Links: | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032633642&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032633642&sequence=000003&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
Umfang: | 498 Seiten |
ISBN: | 9783631846957 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Table of Contents Foreword.............................................................................................................. 11 Introduction: From Word to Concept and Antinomy: The Critique of Tyranny and Praise of Monarchy in Antiquity and the Middle Ages........ 11 Tyranny as a Problem and Element of Discourse in the Twentieth Century and the Present Day ........................................................................ 13 In the Beginning Was the Word..................................................................... 15 Tyranny in Antiquity: From Word to Systematic Concept ........................ 17 Tyranny in the Middle Ages: Tyranny as the Antinomy of the Kingdom .. 22 The Unity of Opposites’: The Opposition Between Monarchy and Tyranny and the Relativization of Tyranny.................................................. 27 Jacob Burckhardt and the Myth of Renaissance ‘Despotism’..................... 29 A Different History of Ideas: Methodology.................................................. 33 Part One: The Machiavellian Coup: Tyrant à rebours. The Onset of a New Era Chapter I. The Machiavellian Paradox: Machiavellian ‘Paradoxes’ and ‘Moments’ ........................................................................................ 39 II Principe Nuovo: Moses or Cesare Borgia? In Search of a Positive Model 42 II Principe Nuovo and Negative Models: The Rhetoric and Dialectics of Machiavelli s Arguments............................................................................ 60 A Reverse Mirror: Construction and Literary Genre of II
Principe........... 66 II Principe Nuovo: An Unnamed Tyrant........................................................ 73 Machiavelli - A Republican by Conviction or a Monarchist by Necessity? 87
6 Table of Contents Chapter II. The Machiavellian Moment and the Political Correctness of Erasmus: The Times of Machiavelli, Guicciardini and Vettori ........................................................................................... 97 Machiavelli versus Erasmus and the Principles of Renaissance-era Political Correctness..................................................................................... 104 Institutio Principis Christiani as a Masterpiece of Renaissance Humanism .................................................................................................... 106 First Major Theme: The Rule of a True Prince as a Reflection of Divine Power Versus Tyrannical Rule as a Reflection of the Devil’s Power ............................................................................................................. 115 Minor Theme: If the Prince is Not a Philosopher, He is a Tyrant............. 117 Second Major Theme: Contrasting Catalogues of a True Prince and a Tyrant............................................................................................................. 118 Third Major Theme: The True Prince as the Father of the Family Versus the Tyrant as a Beast......................................................................... 122 Fourth Major Theme: The Ruler as an Actor on Stage, i.e. Criticism of Feigning Appearances .................................................................................. 124 Minor Theme: It is Better to Abdicate than to Stain One’s Rule with
Bloodshed...................................................................................................... 128 Minor Theme: Tyranny is Better than Long-Lasting Anarchy.................. 129 Conclusion: Dialogue Between the ‘True Prince’ and the ‘New Prince’ ... 131 Chapter III. Thomas More and Niccolò Machiavelli: Tyrannical Readings of the Renaissance? In the Realm of Utopia ........ 135 The Opposition of King ֊ Tyrant: The Examples of Edward IV and Richard III..................................................................................................... 142 Richard III as a Tyrant and Actor on the Stage-as-Scaffold ...................... 151 Tyrannical Readings: Castruccio Castracani - A Psychological Portrait of the ‘New Prince’.......................................................................... 157
Table of Contents 7 A Renaissance Metaphor in the Works of More, Erasmus, and Machiavelli: The Prince as an Actor on Stage............................................. 162 Chapter IV. Callimachus’ Advice: Machiavellian or Anti-Machiavellian Propaganda? ............................................................................... 169 The ‘Tuscoscita’ and his Advice................................................................... 169 Callimachus’Advice: A Political Testament or Propaganda Pamphlet? .... 175 Callimachus’Advice and Machiavellit II Principe - Common Roots?..... 182 Part Two: The Anti-Machiavellian Moment: The Tyrant Restored. The Tyrant as Other During the Era of Rebellion and Religious Wars in Europe Chapter I. The Reformation: from Obedience to the Right of Resistance -Tyranny as Religious Alienation.......................... 191 The Latter Half of the Sixteenth Century: The Era of Abdications, Depositions, and Tyrannicides?.................................................................. 191 The Reformation: from Obedience to Resistance - the Lutherans........... 195 The Reformation: from Obedience to the Right of Resistance - the Calvinists....................................................................................................... 209 Chapter II. The Birth of Anti-Machiavellism: Innocent Gentillet Tyranny as Ethnic Alienation ................................................... 219 The Phantom of Anti-Machiavellism .......................................................... 219 France in the 1570s: Innocent Gentillet - The Paradigm of Tyranny
as Foreignness................................................................................................ 230 Replacing the Tyrant as Religious Other with the Tyrant as Foreigner in France During the Wars of Religion ....................................................... 234
8 Table of Contents Chapter III. Jean Bodin - Despotism as Cultural Alienation................... 243 Jean Bodin and His Doctrine of Absolute Power ...................................... 243 The Problem of Tyranny and the Right of Resistance in Six Books of the Commonwealth........................................................................................ 250 Between Royal and Tyrannical Authority: Despotic Monarchy as an Intermediate Category.................................................................................. 257 Chapter IV. Tyrants, Our Own and Foreign, in Propaganda Literature of the First Interregnum (1572-1574) in the PolishLithuanian Commonwealth ..................................................... 263 The Ideal of Monarchia Mixta and Vestiges of Machiavelli in PolandLithuania ....................................................................................................... 263 The Vicissitudes of the Muscovite Candidacy During the First Interregnum.................................................................................................. 272 Promotional Propaganda - Amidst Stereotypes........................................ 282 Opposition: Open Muscovite Tyranny and the ‘Hidden’ Tyranny of the West ֊ Relativizing the Problem of Tyranny in Pro-Muscovite Propaganda................................................................................................... 285 Familiarity as an Intermediate Category in the Opposition Ours versus Others’ ................................................................................................
289 Part Three: The Humanized Tyrant on the Stage of Theatre and Life: Images of Rulers in the Era of Abdication and Deposition Chapter 1: The Tyrant as Madman: Albrecht Frederick of Prussia and Eric XIV of Sweden...................................................................... 297 Albrecht Frederick of Prussia - A Healthy Upbringing for the Heir to the Throne..................................................................................................... 297 Children of Nebuchadnezzar: Albrecht Frederick’s Disease ֊ Melancholy or Tyranny?............................................................................... 304
Table of Contents 9 Nebuchadnezzar’s Children: Eric XIV, the Mad King of Sweden............. 317 Under the Mask of Melancholy - Fashionable Pose or Disease?.............. 326 Metaphors of Power: The Body and Head of the Ruler and the Health of the State..................................................................................................... 334 Chapter II: The Tyrant as a Man: Anti-Machiavellism in England and Elizabethan Theatre ................................................................... 343 The Birth of Anti-Machiavellism in England............................................. 343 Anti-Machiavellism on the Stage - Man as an Actor and Tyrant............. 348 William Shakespeare - The Human Face of Tyranny............................... 359 Chapter III: The Woman as Tyrant: Mary, Queen of Scots, versus Elizabeth I, Queen of England ................................................ 373 The Problem of Women’s Rule in the Late Sixteenth Century................. 373 John Knox and His Concept of Women’s Rule as Tyranny by Nature ..... 378 George Buchanan - Monarchomachism and the Problem of Female Tyranny.......................................................................................................... 388 The Phenomenon of ‘Two Queens on One Island’- the Image of the Good and Bad Queen................................................................................... 395 Strategies of the Woman-King - the Cult of Elizabeth ............................. 404 Epilogue: Women’s Rule as Naturally Tyrannical and the Place of Women in Sixteenth-Century
Society......................................................... 415 Afterword: Relativization of Tyranny in the Political Culture of the Sixteenth Century....................................................................... 425 Freedom, Tyranny and the ‘Triple Fear Syndrome’ ................................... 425 The Sixteenth-Century ‘Media Revolution,’ the Image of Power and the Circulation of Social Energy................................................................. 429
10 Table of Contents Concluding Remarks on the History of the Term ‘Tyranny’..................... 433 Burckhardt and Machiavelli......................................................................... 439 Bibliography...................................................................................................... 453 Index................................................................................................................... 481
Igor Kąkolewski Melancholy of Power The book discusses how the most severe abuses of political power, traditionally termed from the ancient times as ‘tyranny’, were presented in 16lh century political philosophy, propaganda, and literature in Italy, France, bugiane!, Scotland, German countries, and Poland-Lithuania. Using a unique interdisci plinary methodology, the book is both timeless and timely as it demonstrates various approaches of acknowledged Renaissance intellectuals to the problem of tyranny and how best to avoid or fight it. The author consciously avoids categories of the classic history of ideas or political thought and instead reveals broader intellectual and cultural connections in the perception of tyranny in the 16th century and its impact on modern debates on different dangers of political abuses of power.
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Kąkolewski, Igor 1963- |
author2 | Anessi, Thomas |
author2_role | trl |
author2_variant | t a ta |
author_GND | (DE-588)171757556 |
author_facet | Kąkolewski, Igor 1963- Anessi, Thomas |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Kąkolewski, Igor 1963- |
author_variant | i k ik |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV047229126 |
classification_rvk | NN 1300 NN 1520 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)1250465940 (DE-599)BVBBV047229126 |
discipline | Geschichte |
era | Geschichte 1500-1600 gnd |
era_facet | Geschichte 1500-1600 |
format | Book |
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series | Geschichte – Erinnerung – Politik. Studies in History, Memory and Politics |
series2 | Geschichte – Erinnerung – Politik. Studies in History, Memory and Politics |
spellingShingle | Kąkolewski, Igor 1963- Melancholy of power perception of tyranny in European political culture of the 16th century Geschichte – Erinnerung – Politik. Studies in History, Memory and Politics Rezeption (DE-588)4049716-1 gnd Politische Kultur (DE-588)4046540-8 gnd Politische Philosophie (DE-588)4076226-9 gnd Tyrannis (DE-588)4186523-6 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4049716-1 (DE-588)4046540-8 (DE-588)4076226-9 (DE-588)4186523-6 (DE-588)4015701-5 |
title | Melancholy of power perception of tyranny in European political culture of the 16th century |
title_auth | Melancholy of power perception of tyranny in European political culture of the 16th century |
title_exact_search | Melancholy of power perception of tyranny in European political culture of the 16th century |
title_full | Melancholy of power perception of tyranny in European political culture of the 16th century Igor Kąkolewski ; translated by Thomas Anessi |
title_fullStr | Melancholy of power perception of tyranny in European political culture of the 16th century Igor Kąkolewski ; translated by Thomas Anessi |
title_full_unstemmed | Melancholy of power perception of tyranny in European political culture of the 16th century Igor Kąkolewski ; translated by Thomas Anessi |
title_short | Melancholy of power |
title_sort | melancholy of power perception of tyranny in european political culture of the 16th century |
title_sub | perception of tyranny in European political culture of the 16th century |
topic | Rezeption (DE-588)4049716-1 gnd Politische Kultur (DE-588)4046540-8 gnd Politische Philosophie (DE-588)4076226-9 gnd Tyrannis (DE-588)4186523-6 gnd |
topic_facet | Rezeption Politische Kultur Politische Philosophie Tyrannis Europa |
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volume_link | (DE-604)BV039727269 |
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